CurrentBody Series 2
Most complete all-round mask. Broad coverage, a useful wavelength mix, and strong day-to-day comfort, if you want one mask that covers the most bases.
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These mask rankings prioritize comfort, coverage, repeatable routine design, and practical long-term value.
Our picks balance wavelength choice, coverage, comfort, routine friction, and price. There is no single “best” mask, just the best fit for how you'll use it.
Most complete all-round mask. Broad coverage, a useful wavelength mix, and strong day-to-day comfort, if you want one mask that covers the most bases.
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Comfort-first classic. Easy fit and predictable sessions make consistency simple, with a price that stays reasonable for a premium red + NIR mask.
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Best time-saver. Ultra-short 3-minute red + blue sessions are great for busy routines and breakout-prone skin, with a more rigid fit as the trade-off.
Read full reviewFace masks are about comfort, fit, sensible routines, and whether you can realistically stick with three to five sessions a week for months.
| Category | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Dose delivery (usable light at the skin) | Output matters, but only if the mask sits well and delivers light evenly. Masks are about repeatable, usable dose, not headline numbers. |
| Price / Value | Value is the mix of wavelength choice, build, comfort, and how likely you are to use it. Cheap masks that gather dust are expensive. |
| Fit, comfort, and wearability | Comfort is not everything, but it sets the ceiling on consistency. If it pinches, slides, or feels heavy, you will use it less. |
| Routines and controls | Built-in timers and simple modes reduce friction. Apps and extra settings only help if they make you use it more, not if they add steps. |
| Coverage and light distribution | More LEDs is not automatically better. Even coverage across common problem zones matters more than raw LED count. |
| Safety and transparency | Clear safety positioning and honest disclosure matter for something you wear close to your eyes several times a week. |
| Bottom line | The best mask is the one that fits your goals and you will actually use consistently. |
Three-wavelength mask with broad coverage and a more complete wavelength mix
Review: Best all-rounder if you want a wider wavelength mix and broad coverage in a flexible mask. Comfortable enough for regular use, and more complete than most two-wavelength options. Pricier, but easier to justify if you want one mask to cover multiple skin goals.
| Best for | Three-wavelength routines with full-face flexible coverage. |
|---|---|
| Watch-outs | Limited dose transparency (common in masks) and a higher price than simpler red + NIR models. |
| Key specs | 633/830 nm plus added NIR, ~10-minute sessions, flexible design. |
| Price snapshot | $500-$550 (USD). |
| Safety positioning | FDA-cleared positioning (manufacturer). |
Comfort-first mask focused on fit and coverage
Review: Best comfort-centric pick, and still strong value in the premium red + NIR category. Simple, predictable sessions and an easy fit make it one of the safest recommendations for long-term use.
| Best for | Mainstream routines with consistent fit. |
|---|---|
| Watch-outs | Missing detailed wavelength and irradiance data. |
| Key specs | 132 LEDs, ~10-minute sessions, flexible silicone. |
| Price snapshot | $395-$450 (USD). |
| Safety positioning | FDA-cleared positioning (manufacturer). |
Ultra-short red + blue sessions in a structured daily routine
Review: Best for short, low-effort sessions. The 3-minute routine makes consistency easy, and red + blue covers both breakouts and general skin goals. The rigid fit and limited dose transparency keep it below the top all-round picks.
| Best for | Short, structured red + blue routines. |
|---|---|
| Watch-outs | No irradiance-at-skin data and a rigid fit. |
| Key specs | Red + blue modes, 3-minute auto-off sessions, rigid shell design. |
| Price snapshot | $455 (USD). |
| Safety positioning | FDA-cleared positioning (manufacturer). |
Multi-wavelength mask with vibration for a more treatment-like session
Review: Best if you want an all-in-one face gadget. The vibration makes sessions feel more like a short treatment, and the multi-mode approach is convenient if you are balancing several concerns. Higher price and heavier fit mean it makes most sense for people who actually want the vibration feature, not just LED.
| Best for | LED plus vibration in a single routine. |
|---|---|
| Watch-outs | High price and limited irradiance data. |
| Key specs | Red/NIR/blue modes, rigid shell, short multi-mode sessions. |
| Price snapshot | $599-$699 (USD). |
| Safety positioning | FDA-cleared positioning (manufacturer). |